Alan Burns (professor)

Professor Alan Burns FREng[1] FIET FBCS SMIEEE CEng is a professor in the Computer Science Department at the University of York, England. He has been at the University of York since 1990, and held the post of Head of Department from 1999 until 30 June 2006, when he was succeeded by John McDermid.

He is a member of the department's Real-Time Systems Research Group,[2] and has authored or co-authored over three-hundred publications, with a large proportion of them concentrating on real time systems and the Ada programming language. Burns has been actively involved in the creation of the Ravenscar profile, a subset of Ada's tasking model, designed to enable the analysis of real-time programs for their timing properties.

In 2006, Alan Burns was awarded the Annual Technical Achievement Award for technical achievement and leadership by the IEEE Technical Committee on Real-time Systems. In 2009, he was elected Fellow[3] of the Royal Academy of Engineering.[4] He is also a Fellow of the British Computer Society (BCS) and the Institution of Engineering and Technology (IET), and a Fellow of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE).

Books

Alan Burns has written a number of computer science books.[5]

  • Alan Burns, Andy Wellings (5 April 2001). Real-Time Systems and Programming Languages. Ada 95, Real-Time Java and Real-Time POSIX (3rd ed.). Addison-Wesley. ISBN 0-201-72988-1.
  • Alan Burns, Andy Wellings (November 1998). Concurrency in Ada (2nd ed.). Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-62911-X.
gollark: Hmm, I suspect the issue may be that sshd doesn't write to some "utmp" thing.
gollark: I worked out how to use `socklog` so I now have a pleasant logreading experience, although not as good as with systemd.
gollark: Great, time resynchronized, now to fix my other issues!
gollark: It's better at correcting for drift and such.
gollark: Oh, I see, dnscrypt-proxy failed because the time is wrong and now there is an endless cycle of apioforms.

References



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